Trayvon Martin and Jordan Davis’ deaths have sparked outrage in Florida over the “Stand Your Ground” law. But what most people don’t realize, instead of repealing the law, Florida lawmakers are actually trying to expand the law. Lawmakers are considering two bills that would let anyone in fear of his life to fire a warning shot.

Florida State Republican Rep. Neil Combee, one of the bill’s sponsors, said of the warning shot, “I think it’s a clarification.”

Combee wants reform for people like Marissa Alexander. In 2012, she fired a warning shot during a domestic dispute. A court rejected her “stand your ground” claim, and sentenced her to 20 years under Florida’s gun laws.

On Monday, hundreds of protesters, including the parents of Trayvon Martin and the mother of Jordan Davis, protested on the Florida state capitol on Tallahassee to demonstrate against the law.

“To have laws that tell people that they can shoot first and then ask questions later is a violation of our civil rights. I believe that law is inherently wrong,” the Rev. Al Sharpton said, speaking to the crowd of protesters. “The law in effect says based on your imagination — if you imagine I’m a threat — you have the right to kill me.”

Fulton said, “We don’t have to have a law in place that says, ‘I need to shoot and kill someone and then ask questions later’. … These two moms are going to make positive change to make sure that ‘stand your ground’ doesn’t continue to happen.”

McBath called the potential expansion of the law to include warning shots “heinous.”

“More lives are at risk,” she said. “More people will shoot their guns and claim, ‘Well, I was just — you know, It was just a warning shot’.”